James Cone is widely regarded as the "father of Black Theology"--his own synthesis of Gospel message embodied by Martin Luther King, Jr., and the black pride of Malcolm X. Next year marks the 50th anniversary of his first book, Black Theology and Black Power. This new work is truly the capstone to that career, showing how he was compelled by events to articulate this theology, how it led to his career at Union and his succession of books--along the way learning from his critics, his students, and the ongoing challenge of his principal models--King, Malcolm X, and James Baldwin.
Award-winning Author and Rhetorical Historian | B.W. Rawlins Professor of Rhetoric & Media Studies @UofMCOMM | Pastor, @GLife2002, Sigma🤘🏾
Also, by drawing on Cone's "Said I Wasn’t Gonna Tell Nobody: The Making of a Black Theology" (2018) as a narrative guide, he employs rhetorical history as a methodological framework that examines the progression of Cone’s prophetic rhetoric,
Spread kindness more often than Nutella 💥 Don't take life too seriously, you will day anyway, Dance me to the end of love🎶
James Carr 😎🙏 You Got My Mind Messed Up🎶 I said I wasn't gonna tell nobody else But I just can't keep it all to myself now #soul #deepsoul #JamesCarr https://t.co/DVnDMaOZqd